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Bryan Kohbherger can face death penalty if convicted in trial of slain Idaho college students, judge rules

Bryan Kohberger, the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students in 2022, can face the death penalty, a judge has ruled.

Kohberger’s defense team had sought to remove the death penalty as a possible punishment should he be convicted, but Ada County Judge Steven Hippler denied their motions in his ruling dated Tuesday. The prosecution has said it intends to seek the death penalty if Kohberger is convicted.

Kohberger’s attorneys’ arguments included claims that forcing inmates to wait for years on death row and the methods available for prisoners to be executed in Idaho both constitute cruel and unusual punishment. They also argued Idaho’s death penalty laws violate an international treaty banning the torture of prisoners.

Kohberger is accused of the Nov. 13, 2022, stabbing deaths of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves. All four were students at the University of Idaho and were killed in a home off campus. Kohberger was arrested on Dec. 30, 2022, in Pennsylvania and was extradited back to Idaho in January 2023. He is charged with four counts of first degree murder.

Idaho student murders victims
From left, Kaylee Goncalves, Maddie Mogen, Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle.

Kohberger did not respond when asked in court to enter a plea last year, so a not guilty plea was entered for him by the judge. Kohberger in September was booked into jail in Boise, where his trial was moved at the request of the defense.

His trial is scheduled to begin in August 2025.  

Goncalves’ family in a statement said they were “overjoyed” at the decision and criticized the judge who had been handling to case prior to the move to Boise for “failing to pronounce the victims’ names correctly, laughing in the courtroom, or entertaining every absurd motion or argument the defense could muster.”

“We finally have a judge who appears prepared, thoughtful, and well-versed in the legal process,” they said. “There is a newfound level of seriousness that has been absent for far too long…Justice is moving forward, and we pray that one day, in the not-so-distant future, it will be served.”

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Jan. 6 Capitol rioter from Tennessee convicted of creating “kill list” in plot to murder FBI agents who investigated him

A Tennessee man who was arrested for his involvement in the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot was convicted Wednesday of planning to kill federal investigators.

Edward Kelley, 35, was found guilty in Knoxville of conspiracy to murder federal employees, solicitation to commit a crime of violence, and influencing a federal official by threat, the U.S. attorney’s office said in a news release.

Kelley, of Maryville, was one of hundreds of rioters arrested on charges of illegally entering the U.S. Capitol. While awaiting trial, Kelley developed a plan to kill law enforcement, including FBI agents, prosecutors said. He faces up to life in prison at sentencing in May.

Kelley developed a “kill list” of FBI agents and others who participated in the investigation, according to prosecutors. He distributed the list, along with videos containing images of FBI employees, to another person as part of his “mission.” Court records show that a witness provided the list of 37 names to a police department in Tennessee.

A cooperating defendant who has pleaded guilty in the conspiracy testified that he and Kelley planned attacks on the FBI’s Knoxville office using car bombs and incendiary devices attached to drones. They strategized about assassinating FBI employees in their homes and in public places such as movie theaters, prosecutors said.

Kelley was recorded saying “every hit has to hurt,” according to evidence presented at trial.

The conviction comes as waves of U.S. Capitol riot defendants are citing Donald Trump’s election in requests to delay their criminal prosecutions because of his public pledge to pardon some of the people convicted of crimes on Jan. 6, 2021.

In court filings reviewed by CBS News, defense attorneys asked federal judges in Washington, D.C., to postpone proceedings in some of the Jan. 6 cases until 2025, when President-elect Donald Trump takes office.

The filings complicate the Justice Department’s ability to conclude its prosecutions — hundreds of which remain active — before the changeover in power.  

Capitol Riot Tennessee
Rioters storm the West Front of the U.S. Capitol, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.

John Minchillo / AP


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Man sentenced to life in prison for murder of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley

Man sentenced to life in prison for murder of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley – CBS News

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A judge on Wednesday found Jose Ibarra guilty on all 10 counts in the murder of University of Georgia student Laken Riley. Ibarra was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

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Father of 14-year-old accused in deadly Georgia school shooting pleads not guilty

The father of a 14-year-old boy accused of carrying out a deadly mass shooting at Apalachee High School in Georgia pleaded not guilty on Thursday to the charges against him.

Colin Gray was not in court, but his lawyers told the judge during a brief hearing that their client pleads not guilty and waived formal arraignment. It’s common in Georgia for defendants to enter a plea and waive arraignment.

Gray and his son, Colt Gray, were both indicted in the Sept. 4 shooting that killed two students and two teachers and injured others. Colt Gray is charged as an adult and was indicted on 55 counts, including murder and 25 counts of aggravated assault at the high school. His father was indicted on 29 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of involuntary manslaughter. Both also face multiple counts of cruelty to children.

Colt Gray entered a not guilty plea last month and also waived arraignment.

Colt Gray is being held in a juvenile detention center in Gainesville, while Colin Gray, 54, is being held in the Barrow County jail. Neither has sought to be released on bail.

The shooting killed teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Cristina Irimie, 53, and students Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, both 14. Another teacher and eight more students were wounded, seven of them hit by gunfire.

Colin Gray is the first adult known to be charged in a school shooting in Georgia. His indictment is the latest example of prosecutors holding parents responsible for their children’s actions in school shootings. Michigan parents Jennifer and James Crumbley, the first to be convicted in a U.S. mass school shooting, were sentenced to at least 10 years in prison for not securing a firearm at home and acting indifferently to signs of their son’s deteriorating mental health before he killed four students in 2021.

Investigators have said Colt Gray carried a semiautomatic assault-style rifle onto a school bus, with the barrel sticking out of his book bag, wrapped up in a poster board. They say the boy carefully plotted the shooting at the 1,900-student high school northeast of Atlanta, drawing diagrams and listing potential body counts in a notebook. He left his second-period class and emerged from a bathroom with the rifle before shooting people in a classroom and hallways.

Last month, authorities revealed details from the alleged shooter’s notebooks that included detailed plans of the attack as well as violent drawings. Witnesses testified Colin Gray knew of his son’s struggles with his mental health but purchased a laser sight, tactical vest and ammunition for him in the months leading up to the shooting. 

Investigators also said that the alleged shooter made a “shrine” to school shooters in his room, and hung a picture of the Parkland shooter, who killed 17 people at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018. Their testimony revealed his father was aware of his obsession with school shooters, and that the teenager had even discussed the Parkland shooting with his grandmother around a week before the shooting.

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Mexican cartel leader who faked own death to “live a life of luxury” in U.S. is arrested in California, feds say

A high-ranking Mexican cartel leader who faked his own death to “live a life of luxury” in California has been arrested and charged with drug trafficking, U.S. officials said Thursday. 

Cristian Fernando Gutierrez-Ochoa was arrested in Riverside, California, on Tuesday, the Justice Department said in a statement.

Gutierrez-Ochoa is the son-in-law of Nemesio Oseguera-Cervantes, 58, also known as “El Mencho,” the leader of the Jalisco New Generation cartel, which the officials described as “one of the world’s most violent and prolific drug trafficking organizations.”

Nicole Argentieri, a senior Justice Department official, said Gutierrez-Ochoa “allegedly directed the importation of tons of methamphetamine and cocaine into the United States and engaged in violence to aid the cartel’s criminal activities.”

Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said Gutierrez-Ochoa “allegedly faked his own death and assumed a false identity to evade justice and live a life of luxury in California.”

According to court documents, Gutierrez-Ochoa began working for the Jalisco cartel in 2014 and coordinated the shipment of 40,000 kilograms (88,000 pounds) of methamphetamine and 2,000 kilograms of cocaine from Mexico to the United States.

In 2021, he allegedly kidnapped two members of the Mexican navy in an attempt to secure the release of Oseguera-Cervantes’s wife, who had been arrested by the Mexican authorities.

Oseguera-Cervantes, the Jalisco cartel founder, has also been indicted in the United States and the State Department has offered a $10 million reward for his capture.

“He is the number one priority for DEA and frankly for federal law enforcement in the United States,” DEA agent Matthew Donahue told CBS News in 2019.

“El Mencho’s” son was convicted in a U.S. federal court in September of charges that he used violence, including the deadly downing of a military helicopter, to help his father operate one of the country’s largest and most dangerous narcotics trafficking organizations.

Rubén Oseguera, known as “El Menchito,” was convicted after a trial in Washington’s federal court of conspiring to distribute cocaine and methamphetamine for U.S. importation and using a firearm in a drug conspiracy.

In December 2022, the Mexican army captured Antonio Oseguera, the brother of “El Mencho.”  He allegedly oversaw violent actions and logistics, and bought weapons and laundered money for the Jalisco cartel. The U.S. Treasury Department listed Antonio Oseguera’s alias as “El Tony Montana,” an apparent reference to the fictional protagonist of the 1983 gangster film “Scarface.”

The Jalisco cartel is better known for producing millions of doses of deadly fentanyl and smuggling them into the United States disguised to look like Xanax, Percocet or oxycodone. Such pills cause about 70,000 overdose deaths per year in the United States.

“Defeating the two cartels responsible for the deadly drug crisis in the United States is the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)’s top operational priority, and with the arrest of Cristian Fernando Gutierrez-Ochoa, we are much closer,” DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said in a statement Thursday.

Earlier this year, the U.S. imposed sanctions on a group of Mexican accountants and firms allegedly linked to a timeshare fraud ring run by the Jalisco cartel in a multi-million dollar scheme targeting Americans.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Georgia woman convicted of killing her toddler and dumping his body in trash bin is sentenced to life in prison

A Georgia woman convicted of killing her 20-month-old son and dumping his body in a trash bin was sentenced Thursday to life in prison.

Leilani Simon was spared the maximum punishment of life without a chance of parole. Her sentencing hearing in Chatham County Superior Court came a month after a trial jury found Simon guilty of malice murder and 18 other charges in the death of her son, Quinton Simon.

Simon called 911 the morning of Oct. 5, 2022, to report her son was missing from his indoor playpen at their home outside Savannah. After police spent days searching the home and surrounding neighborhood, Chatham County Police Chief Jeff Hadley said that investigators believed the child was dead. He also named Simon as the sole suspect.

Police and FBI agents focused their investigation on a landfill two weeks after the boy was reported missing. They sifted through trash for more than a month before finding human bones, which DNA tests confirmed belonged to Quinton.

Murder carries an automatic life sentence under Georgia law. Because prosecutors did not seek the death penalty, the main decision for Judge Tammy Stokes was whether to grant Simon a chance of someday being released on parole. The judge imposed another 10 years in prison for concealing the child’s death.

During Thursday’s sentencing hearing, prosecutors doubled down that Simon has not taken accountability, CBS affiliate WTOC-TV reported.

“She just doesn’t seem sorry at all. She really doesn’t seem sorry. She seems sorry that she got caught. She seems sorry that she had to stand trial,” said Special Assistant District Attorney Tim Dean.

During the hearing, the case’s lead detective, Marian Lemmons, revealed new details not included in trial, the station reported. Lemmons said Simon implicated innocent people and was out drinking the night investigators announced the landfill search for Quinton’s body.

Simon did not testify at her sentencing hearing. She did speak to give consent for the judge to release her son’s remains to her family. Authorities had kept them in case further forensic tests were ordered.

“My son’s been through enough,” Simon said. “I want my baby home.”



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84-year-old Texas man accused of killing roommate and her dog in “very, very brutal attack”

An 84-year-old Texas man has been charged with first-degree murder after allegedly killing his roommate and her dog, authorities said.

Police in Austin, Texas responded to a deceased person call at a home in the city’s University Hills area on Monday afternoon, according to a news release from the department. Austin Police Department officers found a dead woman and dog inside the home. The woman was later identified as Linda Mlsna, 83, the department said. 

APD detective Israel Pina described the scene as a “very, very brutal attack,” according to CBS affiliate CBS Austin. It’s the 63rd homicide in the city this year, police said. 

While investigating Mlsna’s death, homicide detectives found that her roommate was unaccounted for. Jack Moore was a mutual friend of Mlsna’s son, CBS Austin reported, and had stayed on as a roommate when Mlsna’s son moved away. Lupita Diaz, a neighbor who lived across the street from the home, told CBS Austin that Mlsna had begun having issues living with Moore.

dd6e6acd-66a4-74b3-fab8-a3def82c1c70.jpg
Jack Moore

Austin Police Department


“It was probably like a month ago that she told me she didn’t feel comfortable with him around,” Diaz said.

The APD’s Tactical Intelligence Unit and the Lone Star Fugitive Task Force arrested Moore on an unrelated warrant related to carjacking, CBS Austin reported. Investigators found that Moore had been using Mlsna’s credit cards to make purchases after her death. 

Moore confessed to killing Mlsna and her dog, taking the credit cards and formulating a plan to flee the country during an interview with detectives, the APD said. 

Moore was arrested on a charge of first-degree murder and booked into the Travis County Jail. He is being held on $1 million bail, CBS Austin reported. The station also reported Moore has a criminal history and has served prison time, but police told the affiliate that there had been no domestic violence-related calls to Mlsna’s home.

“We shouldn’t underestimate anyone. He’s 84 years old,” said Pina. “But you just can’t predict who is dangerous and who is not. It is disturbing that you never know, when you have someone living with you, who you’re actually bringing in unless you thoroughly vet them, or you’ve known them your entire life.”

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Surge of guns and ammunition flowing from U.S. to Latin America and Caribbean, fueling conflict

Authorities have seen a surge of guns and ammunition flowing from the United States to Latin America and the Caribbean, fueling conflict in regions already struggling with violence and unrest.

Last week, U.S.-based airlines were struck by gunfire while flying over Haiti’s airspace. While the origin of the firearms remains uncertain, Haiti has no domestic firearms manufacturing capacity, and aside from a small artisanal market, the majority of weapons fueling the violence are likely sourced from the U.S.  

A new report from research organization Small Arms Survey reveals a staggering nearly 120% surge in firearm shipments seized en route from the U.S. to the Caribbean and Latin America since 2016.  

“Available evidence indicates that traffickers in the U.S. are a major source of illicit weapons in the Caribbean and Latin America,” said Matt Schroeder, senior researcher at Small Arms Survey and author of the report. “The illicit acquisition and use of firearms in the Caribbean and Latin America ranks among the most pressing security threats in the hemisphere.”

Their analysis, based on previously unpublished border seizure data obtained through public records requests, highlights a growing problem. These figures represent only the weapons actually seized, leaving out the vast number of guns trafficked across the U.S. or uncovered through criminal investigations. While it’s unclear if these increases reflect more thorough screening, a rise in trafficking or improved data collection, the trend unmistakably points to a consistent demand for illicit firearms.

The black market of American guns and ammunition has been well-established by U.S. and international law enforcement as a key source of weapons fueling humanitarian crises and violence in places like Mexico, Haiti and beyond. A 2023 CBS Reports investigation found up to a million firearms are smuggled across the border annually, including military-grade weapons like grenade launchers and belt-fed Gatling-style miniguns.

The illicit flow of firearms is now a major concern across the Caribbean as well. A recent report by the Government Accountability Office shows that U.S.-sourced firearms account for the vast majority of the violence in Caribbean nations. The report states that 73% of the firearms recovered in the Caribbean between 2018 and 2023 were traced back to the U.S., with a significant portion of these weapons sold in Florida, Georgia and Texas. These firearms are responsible for 90% of homicides in some of the region’s most vulnerable nations.

The Small Arms Survey’s latest findings reflect these broader trends, highlighting an increase in rifles seized as percentage of all interdicted firearms.

Of the seized rifles headed for the Caribbean, 77% were AK- and AR-style rifles, compared with 48% in shipments to Mexico and 61% to other Latin American countries — though the total number of rifles seized while heading to the Caribbean remains lower than the quantities seized in shipments to Latin America. In the Caribbean-bound shipments, 93% of the magazines that were identifiable by capacity were capable of holding more than 10 rounds, making them high-capacity magazines. 

Anna Schecter

contributed to this report.

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Inspection of shipping containers at Belgium port turns up 4.78 tons of cocaine, weapons and $193,000 in cash

Coast Guard offloads more than 29,000 pounds of cocaine in San Diego


Coast Guard offloads more than 29,000 pounds of cocaine in San Diego

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Belgian authorities said on Friday they had seized almost five tons of cocaine stashed in shipping containers at Antwerp port, as part of a cross-border investigation into a drug-trafficking ring.

Prosecutors said eight people were detained following searches carried out in Belgium and the Netherlands earlier this month.

The inspections led to the seizure of $193,000 in cash as well as weapons, jewelry, luxury handbags, watches and 4.78 tons of cocaine.

The probe focused on a criminal organization involved in trafficking cocaine to Belgium from South America, Central America and Canada, the prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

The group allegedly facilitated the clearing of suspicious containers in the port of Antwerp and, in return for payment, provided logistical assistance to other organisations, it said.

Antwerp’s port is one of the major gateways for drugs smuggled from South America to the European market, and busts in and around the vast facility occur frequently.

Cocaine seizures there hit a record 116 tons last year.

Last month, a Belgian court jailed dozens of people in the country’s biggest ever drug trial, with the ringleaders sentenced to up to 17 years behind bars.

BELGIUM-DRUGS-TRIAL
A policeman stands guard before the court’s verdict in the country’s biggest ever drug trafficking trial at Brussels correctional court, at Justitia, in Brussels, on October 29, 2024. 

ERIC LALMAND/Belga/AFP via Getty Images


Earlier this year, police announced the takedown of a major network transporting Latin American cocaine into Europe by boat in an international operation involving 50 arrests across eight countries. Around that same time, authorities in Paraguay announced the largest cocaine seizure in the country’s history, after officials were surprised to find more than 4 tons of the drug stashed inside a shipment of sugar bound for Belgium. 

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U.S. bars former Colombia army commander, citing extrajudicial killings of civilians

The United States on Friday announced sanctions against a former Colombian general it said was involved in extrajudicial killings of civilians falsely reported as combat deaths.

The punishment means former general Mario Montoya and his family are barred from traveling to the U.S., Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

Montoya used to command the Colombian army and was one of the senior officers closest to then-president Alvaro Uribe, who served from 2002 to 2010, while the government waged a fierce offensive against the leftist guerrilla army known as the FARC.

In 2023, a special court in Colombia indicted Montoya on charges of crimes against humanity over the death or disappearance of 130 civilians falsely reported as having died in clashes with guerrilla forces.

Colombia General
In this Oct. 17, 2018 file photo, former Army General Mario Montoya arrives to testify before a peace tribunal investigating his role in extrajudicial killings of civilians during Colombia’s long, armed conflict in Bogota, Colombia. 

Fernando Vergara / AP


The State Department said it supported a 2016 peace accord between FARC and the government under which the rebels, then the most powerful guerrilla army in Latin America, laid down their arms.

This reduced violence in Colombia, which had been torn for decades by fighting between government forces, rebels and paramilitary groups linked to drug trafficking.

But Colombia’s internal conflict heated up again in recent years as FARC rebels who rejected the 2016 accord kept fighting the government, with violence also coming from another holdout guerrilla group, the National Liberation Army (ELN), and drug cartels, among other armed groups.

“The United States will continue efforts to support a durable and lasting peace in Colombia that recognizes the needs of victims and survivors,” the State Department said in a statement.

Earlier this year, a 10-year-old boy died in a drone attack targeting soldiers amid a wave of guerrilla violence in Colombia. The grenade fell on a soccer field in the town of El Plateado, a stronghold of the Central General Staff (EMC) rebel group which broke away from FARC.

Guerrillas are increasingly using commercially available drones to drop explosives on rivals, the BBC reported. In June, the Colombian army reported 17 drone attacks over six weeks, with no resulting deaths. Drones have also been used by Colombia’s government to increase surveillance, the BBC reported.

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